Documents: Money woes for Fla. family in midst of Petraeus scandal

Wednesday

Nov 14, 2012 at 8:43 PM

TAMPA, Fla. — When news vans camped outside her stately home, a Florida socialite tied to the Gen. David Petraeus sex scandal fell back on her informal credentials as a social ambassador for Tampa society and top military brass: She asked police for diplomatic protection.

MATT SEDENSKY and TAMARA LUSHThe Associated Press

TAMPA, Fla. — When news vans camped outside her stately home, a Florida socialite tied to the Gen. David Petraeus sex scandal fell back on her informal credentials as a social ambassador for Tampa society and top military brass: She asked police for diplomatic protection.

In a phone call to authorities, Jill Kelley, a party hostess and unofficial social liaison for leaders of the U.S. military's Central Command in Tampa, cited her status as an honorary consul general while complaining about media that had descended on her two-story, five-bedroom brick home overlooking Tampa Bay, which was purchased in 2004 for $1.5 million.

"You know, I don't know if by any chance, because I'm an honorary consul general, so I have inviolability, so they should not be able to cross my property. I don't know if you want to get diplomatic protection involved as well," she told the 911 dispatcher Monday.

Nearly all lines in the tangled sex scandal involving Petraeus lead back to Kelley, whose complaint about anonymous, threatening emails triggered the FBI investigation that led to the general's downfall as director of the CIA. And now Kelley is in the middle of an investigation of the Gen. John Allen, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, over alleged "inappropriate communications" between the two.

Kelley's friendship with Petraeus and his wife began when the general arrived in Tampa about 2008. Kelley and her husband, Scott, a cancer surgeon, had moved to the area a few years earlier and threw a welcome party at their home, a short distance from MacDill Air Force Base, where Central Command is headquartered.

Hundreds of pages of court documents in several lawsuits detail financial troubles for the Kelleys and Jill Kelley's twin sister, Natalie Khawam, who lived with the couple.

Chase Bank sued Scott Kelley in 2010 over a $25,880 unpaid credit card bill, and an investment by the Kelleys in a Tampa office building turned into a dispute with the tenant over $28,000-a-month rent. The couple didn't pay the mortgage and entered into foreclosure.

Attorney Barry Cohen represented the Kelleys in the case, but they turned around and sued him over legal fees, claiming he overcharged them by $5,000. The suit was dismissed, but court documents did not say what happened.

Natalie Khawam worked for Cohen's firm. She filed a lawsuit against the firm's chief financial officer, claiming she was sexually harassed after she asked about reimbursement for expenses, according to the court documents. She claimed Alan Goldberg asked her why she needed the money and she said because she was a single mom and needed to pay her divorce lawyer. "You have nice legs, your lawyer won't drop you" she claimed he replied.

Cohen, defending Goldberg, disputed all of her accusations, and said Khawam had a history of lying to the court, according to the documents.

A report by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission found the facts did not support that "working conditions were so intolerable that a reasonable person in her position would have been compelled to resign."

Khawam, who earned $270,822 in 2010, quit the firm and filed for bankruptcy in April, listing almost $350,000 in assets against $3.6 million in liabilities, including an $800,000 personal loan from her sister and brother-in-law, according to court documents. It was not clear whether the loan was made over time.

Her assets were a $344,000 residential property in Washington, D.C., a 2000 Volvo and jewelry, clothes and $694 in cash. Her liabilities included two mortgages totaling $367,000 on the D.C. property, more than $100,000 in student loans and three other personal loans totaling $1.1 million.

In another twist in the scandal, court records indicate that Petraeus and Allen intervened two months ago in a messy custody dispute on behalf of Khawam. The judge awarded Khawam's ex-husband custody of their son last year. He also called Khawam dishonest and lacking in integrity.

For her part, Jill Kelley has taken a low profile since Petraeus' affair with his biographer, Paula Broadwell, became public. The Kelleys have retained high-powered Washington lawyer Abbe Lowell, who did not immediately return a call.

Jill Kelley was appointed honorary consul for South Korea for the city of Tampa in August after she met with the nation's ambassador when he and other embassy staff visited Florida to promote a free trade agreement subsequently approved by Congress.

South Korean Embassy officials said the position doesn't give her diplomatic immunity or powers, and she hadn't really done anything in her new role. Kelley was one of 10 honorary consuls in the U.S. and one of two in Florida.

Soong Yoon, consul general at the South Korean Embassy in Washington, said South Korea is reviewing Kelley's appointment.

"We are keeping an eye on what's happening in this case and we will review the whole process," Yoon said. "Any decision will depend on our official assessment."

Jill Kelley's pass to MacDill Air Force Base was indefinitely suspended in the last couple of days, Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. Steven Warren said Wednesday. Kelley can still enter the base but now must report to the visitor center and sign in.

In 2005, the Kelleys established the Doctor Kelley Cancer Foundation Inc., according to the Florida Department of State.

In 2007, the last year they filed paperwork, the foundation reported revenues of $157,284 to the IRS, all from direct donations, but the charity's expenses totaled the same amount. The group spent $43,317 in meals and entertainment; $38,610 in travel and $25,013 in legal fees, among other things.

The filing also said $58,417 went toward the charity's mission to "research studies into efforts to discover ways to improve the quality of life of terminally-ill adult cancer patients" but it's not clear what specifically the money was spent on.

The only three listed officers for the organization were the Kelleys and Kwaham, who all shared the title of director, according to the IRS filing. The foundation was run out of the Kelleys home.

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